Some readers think I exaggerate the influence of the lobby. I don’t — I used to work at AIPAC and on its favorite stomping ground, Capitol Hill. The latest evidence of the fear and trembling produced by the Israel lobby was evidenced last week when it was revealed that General David Petraeus was upset and worried by a column I wrote in March.

by MJ Rosenberg

The old adage “politics stops at the water’s edge” does not apply to the Middle East.

When it comes to all matters relating to Israel, foreign policy is politics. It is absolutely impossible to imagine US policy toward Israel not being intertwined with politics and political fund-raising.

That is how Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s meetings with President Obama and other administration officials this week should be viewed.

As David Makovsky of the AIPAC-created Washington Institute for Near East Policy told the Washington Post: “As we get closer to the midterm elections, if there was a gap, it’s narrowing…. I think the blowup in March between Obama and Netanyahu has led each side to realize that they’ve gone too far, and they’ve got to dial it down.”

Makovsky’s opening reference to the “midterm elections” is the key. The United States has to make things right with Israel or the Democratic Party will pay a price, quite literally.

Israel’s loquacious ambassador, Michael Oren, confidently predicted that, unlike the last White House meeting between Netanyahu and Obama, there will be photographers on hand to record the two leaders making nice.

“We are going to have a lot of photographers,” Oren said. Laughing, he added: “There are going to be more photographers there than at the Academy Awards.”

Of course, neither side (with the exception of loose cannon Oren) is likely to admit that this meeting is about politics. They will say that they are about getting negotiations started, although with Israel busily expanding settlements in Jerusalem, it is hard to see how that will happen.

The Palestinians have no great incentive to negotiate with a prime minister whose government solidly opposes any dismantling of settlements, not now and not ever. They can be forgiven for believing that the Washington meeting is a charade.

Hopefully, I’m wrong. But I’ve never lost a bet arguing that what the lobby wants, the lobby gets. Right now, it wants the heat (barely perceptible though it is) off Netanyahu. That is what they will likely get, although the single-issue “pro-Israel” donors still won’t like Obama. (He is perceived as “even-handed,” a term AIPAC uses to describe those insufficiently devoted to Israel.)

Some readers think I exaggerate the influence of the lobby. I don’t — I used to work at AIPAC and on its favorite stomping ground, Capitol Hill.

The latest evidence of the fear and trembling produced by the lobby was evidenced last week when it was revealed that General David Petraeus was upset and worried by a column I wrote in March. I praised him for testifying that the continuation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict threatens all US interests in the Middle East, including our troops. (All the information below comes from a column by Phil Weiss of Mondoweiss, who has possession of the original emails.)

The story starts on March 16, 2010, when Petraeus testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee:

The enduring hostilities between Israel and some of its neighbors present distinct challenges to our ability to advance our interests… Israeli-Palestinian tensions often flare into violence and large-scale armed confrontations. The conflict foments anti-American sentiment, due to a perception of U.S. favoritism for Israel. Arab anger over the Palestinian question limits the strength and depth of U.S. partnerships with governments and peoples in the [region] and weakens the legitimacy of moderate regimes in the Arab world. Meanwhile, al-Qaeda and other militant groups exploit that anger to mobilize support. The conflict also gives Iran influence in the Arab world through its clients, Lebanese Hizballah and Hamas.

As you know, I didn’t say that. It’s in a written submission for the
record…

Petraeus meant that the words I quoted were not in his oral statement. They were in a 56-page document, titled ”Statement of General David H. Petraeus, U.S. Army Commander, US Central Command before the Senate Armed Services Committee on the posture of US Central Command, 16 Mar 2010.”

Of course, the statement submitted for the record is the official statement. It is the statement that was cleared for use by his superiors.

Boot responded four minutes later:

Oh brother. Luckily it’s only media matters [sic] which has no credibility but I think I will do another short item pointing people to what you actually said as opposed to what’s in the posture statement.

Then, six minutes later, Petraeus sends his idea for a strategy to answer those who might take offense at his suggestion that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict harms US interests:

From: Petraeus, David H GEN MIL USA USCENTCOM CCCC/CCCC
2:37

Thx, Max. (Does it help if folks know that I hosted Elie Wiesel and his wife at our quarters last Sun night?! And that I will be the speaker at the 65th anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps in mid-Apr at the Capitol Dome…)

Boot says that citing Petraeus’ friendship with Wiesel would not be necessary because “you’re not being accused of being an anti-Semite.”

Holy cow!

Not only was I not accusing Petraeus of being an anti-Semite, I was praising him for stating, on the record, what most of the top brass believe — that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the perception that the United States is reflexively on Israel’s side, is bad for America. Nor did I distort anything Petraeus said. His only complaint is that he didn’t actually “say” the words but included them in his testimony. In other words, I characterized his words correctly. And that worries him!

But then Max Boot comes to Petraeus’ rescue and posts (in Commentary, where else?) a blog post called “A Lie: David Petraeus, Anti-Israel.” His whole defense of Petraeus consists of the fact that I quote from a “posture statement” (his official statement) not his spoken words. He then goes on to say that the last thing Petraeus believes is that “settlements had to be stopped or that Israel is to blame for the lack of progress in negotiations.”

Boot’s straw-man argument about settlements notwithstanding, the story here is not that Petraeus believes that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict negatively affects US interests throughout the Middle East — and he clearly does — but the panic that ensues when those sentiments are ascribed to him.

President Obama and Congress are infinitely more susceptible to these fears than a four-star General (who is constitutionally immune from political pressure). If Petraeus gets this rattled, what can you expect from politicians?

Since 1998, M.J. Rosenberg has been the Director of Policy Analysis for Israel Policy Forum (IPF). He heads the organization’s Washington, D.C. office and writes IPF FRIDAY, a widely-circulated weekly opinion column which focuses upon U.S. Middle East policy and the Arab-Israeli conflict. Proir to joining IPF, Rosenberg worked for 14 years on Capitol Hill as an aide to Representatives Jonathan Bingham (D-New York), Edward Feighan (D-Ohio), Nita Lowey (D-New York) and Senator Carl Levin (D-Michigan). From 1982 to 1986, Rosenberg edited NEAR EAST REPORT, the American Israel Public Affair Committee’s (AIPAC’s) biweekly publication on Middle East Policy.

Petraeus tries to set the record straight on Israel

5 Comments

The title should reflect his ‘true’ allegiances. Not the faux ones. After all, once an Israeli manchurian candidate, ALWAYS AN ISRAELI MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE!

Orly Teets would be so proud, too!! Imagine the pride the zionist jews in Amerika will feel when they’ve finally achieved FULL CONTROL OVER THEIR cannon fodder providing peons of the Untitled Snakes of A Merry Cow!!!

We could just adopt the six sided star as our flag, who needs stars and bars when you can be a real ROTHSCHILDS member in good standing????

He is a General in the US Army. He and Elie Wiesenthal have absolutely nothing in common, and there is no practical and honest reason why he has any social relationship with Elie Wiesenthal and should have had him and die Frau over to dinner in the quarters other than for political purposes, an item for his political resume, nor for the correspondence with Max Boot, which gives it all away.

I wonder if he wrote off the expense of the dinner and entertainment as a tax deductible political campaign expense? Reverse lobbying!

Must watch the video.
It is interesting…He certainly comes across as an indecisive, insecure and weak man to me.

Coupled with those qualities, and the text of the Max Boot emails, he is a vain and ambitious man of little personal character and strength, an ideal AIPAC candidate for the Presidency.

Given some solutions to his current problem, having been sidetracked off to the wars and out of the way, were he to run in 2012 he would probably beat Obama, who has yet to pay off on the last election, which will cost him the next.

There is no question of whose man he is!

I Don’t underestimate the powers of AIPAC and the ADL. They run deeply.

If they want Petraeus home again, and on the campaign trail in time for 2012, he will be home, out of uniform and running for the job!

Remember that preliminary “collapse!” All it would take is one more such “collapse” for a request for R&R, which would not affect severely his chances to run for President.

Both he and Obama will do as they are told. They are not their own men, they are owned men.

I expect he will not last out the summer in Afghanistan. He will certainly be home before winter.

I find it highly amusing and ironic that Zionist Jews, particularly the AIPAC and ADL organizations, go to such great lengths to prove as true the claims made in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and by Adolf Hitler in Mein Kampf.

It is like they are saying, “We are powerless victims and we’ll destroy anyone that claims otherwise.”